Oral Presentation The Annual Scientific Meeting of the Endocrine Society of Australia and the Society for Reproductive Biology 2012

The role of molecular chaperones in regulating human sperm-egg recognition (#16)

Brett Nixon 1 , Kate A Redgrove 1 , Mark A Baker 1 , R John Aitken 1
  1. Priority Research Centre for Reproductive Science, School of Environmental and Life Sciences, University of Newcastle, CALLAGHAN, NSW, Australia

A common defect encountered in the spermatozoa of male infertility patients is an idiopathic failure of sperm–egg recognition. In order to resolve the molecular basis of this condition we have compared the proteomic profiles of spermatozoa exhibiting an impaired capacity for sperm-egg recognition with normal cells using label free MS-based quantification. This analysis indicated that impaired sperm–zona binding was associated with reduced expression of the molecular chaperone, HSPA2, from the sperm proteome. Western blot analysis confirmed this observation in independent patients and demonstrated that the defect did not extend to other members of the HSP70 family. HSPA2 was present in the acrosomal domain of human spermatozoa as a major component of 5 large molecular mass complexes, the most dominant of which was found to contain HSPA2 in close association with just two other molecules, SPAM1 and ARSA, both of which that have previously been implicated in sperm-egg interaction. The close association between SPAM1, ARSA and HSPA2 in a multimeric complex mediating sperm-egg interaction, coupled with the complete failure of this process when HSPA2 is depleted in infertile patients, provides new insights into the mechanisms by which sperm function is impaired in cases of male infertility.